e acceleration tool-finds trojan

  1. #1
    cannybody2 is offline Junior Member

    Question e acceleration tool-finds trojan

    I have used aSqaured for some time after a reccomendation on this site.It recently recommended a scan from "e acceleration"which purported to find a trojan as follows.C:\\windows\System32\in8bC.dll Trojan MultiDrop 1565.It also found Modification at Win32 HLLM.Generic.346.
    It then offered to clean all this with a 20dollar tool which I did not take for now.
    I checked through Google and Yahoo search for these two items but they both reported no information.Likewise on Dal I did a search which showed no info.
    What would anyone suggest,are these real threats?Is there any other way to remove them if so?Or is it worth subscribing to the 20 dollar tool?
    Cannybody2


  2. #2
    VopThis is offline Senior Member (Canada)
    http://www.siteadvisor.com/sites/eacceleration.com
    One user's opinion:
    I previously observed serious objectionable business practices from eAcceleration, including unduly aggressive advertising, as well as disabling competing programs. But these practices have stopped for 2+ years.

    At this point, in my view, the eAcceleration site is not particularly objectionable. That doesn't mean I'd choose to run their software -- I woudln't. But neither do I think they make spyware.
    Lessor known or obscure tools will often pick out possible items of no real consequence. You can run 100s of tools that will always find 'something else'. Stick with reliable, trustworthy (see my signature below) and proven tools as your guide.


    If you have some concern with a given file, search for the FULL FILE PATH or browse to each file for assessment submission to the site below. Paste into the 'Select File' box or navigate to the file using the BROWSE button:


    http://www.virustotal.com/flash/index_en.html (10MB file size maximum)

  3. #3
    cannybody2 is offline Junior Member
    Quote Originally Posted by VopThis
    http://www.siteadvisor.com/sites/eacceleration.com
    One user's opinion:

    Lessor known or obscure tools will often pick out possible items of no real consequence. You can run 100s of tools that will always find 'something else'. Stick with reliable, trustworthy (see my signature below) and proven tools as your guide.


    If you have some concern with a given file, search for the FULL FILE PATH or browse to each file for assessment submission to the site below. Paste into the 'Select File' box or navigate to the file using the BROWSE button:


    http://www.virustotal.com/flash/index_en.html (10MB file size maximum)
    Thanks for your comments.Still unable to identify these two files.I decided that I would stick to my previuosly held beliefs that if you don,t know anything about the soft wear don,t run it.On that basis I deleted the programme(which involved deleting individual files after the add/delete had been operated).Neither of these files had given me previous trouble and were not visible to my Nod 32,Ad aware.Spybot or Windows Defender nor the spy catcher with Zone Alarm proffesional.As a precaution I also ran CW shredder and a-sqaured,also nothing so I'll take the risk.
    Thanks again
    Cannybody2

  4. #4
    VopThis is offline Senior Member (Canada)
    Save 20% on AVG Internet Security 2012 Suite!
    I decided that I would stick to my previuosly held beliefs that if you don,t know anything about the soft wear don,t run it.On that basis I deleted the programme
    That is a very reasonable approach. Just make sure that you have a backup (kept for a few days) should it be necessary to reinstate any item so deleted. Another approach is rename a given file to see if it is missed or still picked up as a possible bad item.

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